A Demonic Bundle (30 page)

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Authors: Lexi George Kathy Love,Angie Fox

BOOK: A Demonic Bundle
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Yep. She was feeling in total harmony with Scrooge. “Bah Humbug,” she muttered when her only options on the radio seemed to be all Christmas all the time or pounding rap music.
Blue had never been a big fan of Christmas, never having experienced a normal one in her childhood since her flaky mother (yes, flaky considering she’d named her daughter after a color) had done Christmas experimental style every year, never the same way twice, disregarding any of her daughter’s requests. The trend of feeling tacked onto her parents’ Christmas had continued into Blue’s adulthood, and this year she had been determined to have a great holiday all on her terms, booking herself on a cruise with her two equally single friends. She had turned down her mother’s invitation to spend the holiday with an indigenous South American tribe and her father’s request to join him with his barely-legal wife and their baby girl, and instead she was going to sip cocktails in a bikini.
Maybe.
The road in front of her was barely visible, the snow crashing down with pounding determination, the highway slick and ominous, the hours ticking by as Blue barely made progress in the treacherous conditions. Planning to drive to Miami from Ohio instead of flying had been a financial decision and would give Blue the chance to make a pit stop in Tennessee and visit her old friend from high school, but the only thing heading south at the moment was her vacation. It was Christmas Eve, her cruise ship departed in twenty hours, and she’d only made it a hundred miles in six hours, the blizzard swirling around her mocking the brilliance of her plan as she drove through the middle of nowhere Kentucky.
She was going to have to stop in Lexington and see if she could catch a flight to Miami, screw the cost. Not that planes would be taking off in this weather, but maybe by morning. If she flew out first thing, she could be in Florida in plenty of time for her four o’clock sail time. All she had to do was make it to Lexington without losing her sanity from being pummeled with schmaltzy Christmas carols or without losing control of her car in the snow.
When she leaned over and hit the radio again and found the Rolling Stones she nearly wept in gratitude. Classic rock she could handle.
But not her car. As the highway unexpectedly curved and dipped, she fishtailed in the thick snow.
Blue only managed a weak, “Oh, crap,” before she gripped the hell out of the wheel and slid sideways down the pavement, wanting to scream, but unable to make a sound.
She was going to die.
If there hadn’t been anyone else on the road, she might have managed to regain control. But there was no stopping the impact when she swung into the lane next to her, right in the path of an SUV. She wasn’t the only idiot on the road and now they were going to die together.
Blue closed her eyes and hoped there were bikinis and margaritas in the afterlife.
 
Santa was the man. Christian Dawes sang along to the radio at the top of his lungs, the song reminding him of his childhood, when he had listened carefully on Christmas Eve for the telltale sound of reindeer hooves. Tossing the trail mix out for the reindeer to chomp on, putting the cookies on a plate for Santa, the magic and wonder and awe of waking up to a ton of presents, those were some of his best memories.
Someday when he had his own kids, he’d create all of those special moments for them, but right now Christian was content to play awesome uncle, arriving on Christmas Eve loaded down with presents for all his nieces and nephews. His trunk was stuffed with spoils, and he’d brought enough candy to earn glares from his two sisters and potentially make someone sick. But it wasn’t Christmas until a kid stuffed his face with candy then hurled after a session on the sit and spin. That’s what home videos and infamous family stories were made of.
Unfortunately the lousy weather was slowing him down on his drive from Cincinnati to Lexington. He’d left work later than he’d intended anyway, then by the time he’d hit Kentucky, he’d been forced down to thirty miles an hour because apparently the road crews had taken the holiday off and had decided not to plow. He hoped his family wasn’t holding up dinner for him at his parents’ house.
If he wasn’t gripping the steering wheel so hard he would call someone and let them know he still had a couple of hours ahead of him, but he had no intention of reaching for his phone. A glance to the right showed a car next to him, but other than that, he could barely see the road in front of him. He needed Santa to dip down and give him a lift in his sleigh or it was going to be midnight before he arrived.
What he didn’t need was a car accident.
In his peripheral vision, he saw the car next to him slide, spinning out so fast that Christian only had time to swear and tap his brakes before he hit the car with a crunch and they went careening towards the guardrail. When his SUV stopped moving a few seconds later, despite his efforts to turn the skid, he had the other car pinned against the railing.
“Shit!” Christian turned off his car and leaped out, almost taking a header in the thick snow, but terrified that he’d injured someone. “Are you okay?” he asked, yelling through the howling snow as he peered into the driver’s side window.
The major impact of his SUV’s front end had been in the backseat and trunk, so he hoped if there was an injury it wasn’t serious. But with the snow smacking him in the face and the window plastered with wet flakes, he couldn’t really see anything.
He knocked on the glass and when it started to slide down, he sighed in relief.
“Are you okay?” he said again now that the person in front of him could hear him.
“Are you okay?” she said simultaneously.
He nodded.
She nodded.
And Christian became aware that he was staring at the most strikingly beautiful woman he’d ever seen in his whole life.
D
EMON
C
AN’T
H
ELP
I
T
D
EMON
C
AN’T
H
ELP
I
T
KATHY LOVE

KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

www.kensingtonbooks.com

Acknowledgments

I always have very special writing friends who are there for me and help keep me sane.

I want to thank Erin McCarthy for the phone chats and frequent pep talks. Julie Cohen for more phone chats and pep talks. F. Paul Wilson for the “daily damage reports.” And convincing me that a writing routine isn’t totally evil. Thanks to Carmen Ross Weed for being a great and supportive friend.

I must, as always, thank The Tarts.
You ladies rule.

And thanks for Kate Duffy for being a great editor, and a patient one.

Chapter 1

“A
re you sure you feel up to this?”

Jo finished draining the fettuccine and glanced over at her friends. Maggie leaned against the kitchen counter, waiting for an answer to her question. Erika sat at the small bistro-style table, concern drawing her finely arched brows together. Clearly she was waiting, too.

Jo smiled, knowing she probably appeared a little tired. “Of course. It’s just pasta, not a five-course meal. Why wouldn’t I feel up to making my friends dinner to celebrate my new place and my new job?”

“Well, I know you said that you were already working long hours. And you’ve looked a little…pale recently,” Maggie said.

Jo supposed the reflection that greeted her in the mirror these days was pale, drawn, and fatigued. But she’d made a huge move, found an apartment, and started a new job in the course of a month.

“I am a little tired,” she did admit, but then gave them another smile. “But I like the work at the community center and I love being in a new city. And being with you two again, of course.”

She gave the pasta a final shake, then dumped it into a pasta bowl. She turned to the simmering pot of white wine clam sauce, trying to ignore the wave of nausea as the garlicky scent wafted up to her in a billowing cloud of steam.

She hadn’t been feeling well, and she knew that fact was evident on her face. But she would be fine. That had been her mantra now for the past couple months. And it would be true. She just needed to get her life back in order. She liked order.

She busied herself with pouring the creamy sauce over the pasta, then returned to the oven to take out the garlic bread, which, again, did nothing to steady her queasy stomach.

“Here we go,” she said with a forced smile as she set the bowl of fettuccine and platter of bread on the table. “I know you two always loved this meal when I made it for you back in D.C.”

“Mmm, it looks great,” Erika said, staring at the pile of white steaming pasta as if it might turn into a multi-tentacled creature and attack.

“It does look good,” Maggie agreed, giving it her own askance stare. “And it smells good, too,” she added, when she realized that Jo was regarding her with skepticism. Maggie’s forced smile still didn’t convince Jo, but she accepted the praise and sat down.

“Then dig in.” Jo took a sip of her ice water, waiting for her guests to get their servings first.

Erika chose a piece of bread, while Maggie took two small helpings of the pasta. They looked at each other as they did so.

Not for the first time since moving down to New Orleans, Jo felt as if her two friends were sharing some private, wordless communication.

Maggie took a bite of the food, actually more like a nibble. “Mmm, plenty of garlic.” She nodded approvingly, but then her glance flicked back to Erika. Erika’s lips were pressed together as if she was suppressing a chuckle.

Jo glanced back and forth between her friends, again feeling as if she’d been excluded from an inside joke. When she moved here, she’d expected her relationship with her longtime friends to be as it had always been. But it had changed.

Jo supposed it was natural for Maggie and Erika to have a special bond now that they were married to brothers. But sometimes, like now, Jo felt as if Maggie and Erika shared something more, something private. Jo supposed she couldn’t say much about that. After all, it wasn’t as if she wasn’t hiding something from them as well.

She pushed that thought away, focusing on scooping up her own portion of the meal. She needed to think about first things first—wasn’t that what her grandmother had always said? And her grandmother had been a wise woman, a woman Jo had always trusted, loved, and admired. First things first.

And Jo suspected she was being oversensitive about her friends anyway—another side effect of her big move and exhaustion. She just wanted to get her life back in order. She seemed to be a font of mantras and mottos at the moment.

And she
was
very pleased to be back with her friends. She’d been close to Maggie and Erika since freshmen year in college, and they’d always been like sisters. Adopted sisters who’d become so important to her.

“Is Vittorio playing with the Impalers tonight?” Jo asked Erika, feeling the need to steer her thoughts away from places she didn’t want to go. And given how smitten her friends were with their new spouses, she felt certain this would be a topic the two women couldn’t help but discuss. The two new hubbies and their Bourbon Street band, the Impalers.

“Yes,” Erika said, nibbling her bread.

“He’s playing for me tonight,” Maggie said. “Although I think he’s going to take over playing bass. Dave is talking about leaving.”

“That’s good, right?” Jo said.

Erika nodded, setting her bread aside and picking up her fork. “He loves being back, playing with his brother. And I’m enjoying it, too. I have a hot, sexy musician husband—but mostly it gives me time to work on my art.”

“When you’re not down there being a groupie,” Maggie said with a wink.

“Like you can talk,” Jo teased.

Maggie shrugged. “I never denied that I was Ren’s biggest fan. But don’t forget, I’m with the band.”

“So you are still enjoying playing, too?” Jo asked, realizing this was actually the first time since she got here they’d had time to talk about day-to-day life. See, no wonder she looked so exhausted. She’d not stopped since moving out of her apartment in D.C.

“I do. It’s like a dream,” Maggie’s smile was dreamy. “Who could have guessed how things would have changed for us with that first trip here?”

Jo smiled, forcing herself to take a bite of the pasta, the clam sauce slimy on her tongue, the fettuccine turning to paste against the roof of her mouth.

There really wasn’t any way to tell how one event could change the course of your life, Jo thought, but she was working very hard to get her life back in control. No more surprises for her.

They all ate silently for a few moments, or rather picked at their food, lost in thought.

“So,” Erika asked slowly, poking at the pasta with her fork, “isn’t the community center a lot of work compared to your job at Potomac Prep?”

Jo smiled, immediately knowing what her friend was really angling at. “Don’t you mean, isn’t a job at St. Ann Community Center a big step down from Potomac Prep?”

“That isn’t…”

“Yes, it is,” Jo cut Erika off good-naturedly. “And yes, it’s definitely a step down prestige-and money-wise, but it was still the right move for me.”

Maggie set down her fork and reached out to capture Jo’s fingers, squeezing them. “Why the change?”

Jo stared at their joined hands. This was the moment to tell them. To admit what had her running from Washington, D.C., but she couldn’t. The words wouldn’t come. Almost as if once she admitted it, it would be true. All true.

It is true, whether you like it or not.
But then she pushed the thought away.

She set down her fork, and pushed the plate away from herself. Clearly no one at the table had an appetite. Her first dinner party in her new place, and it was less than a success. So much for just having a normal evening with her two best friends.

She hesitated still, trying to get the words to come, but they didn’t. Instead she forced a smile.

“Isn’t it enough that I was feeling left out? Missing my two best friends?”

Erika moved her plate aside, too, and shifted so she could join her hand to Jo and Maggie’s. “It’s definitely enough.”

They stayed like that, her friends’ fingers cool against her skin. A calming coolness that suppressed the nausea that seemed to be just at the back of her throat at all times.

Their kind, caring touch didn’t hold back the tears that threatened to spill over at having them here. She pulled her hand away to sniff and grab her napkin, using the paper to wipe her eyes.

“I guess I really am overtired,” Jo said with a watery laugh.

Both Maggie and Erika gave her sympathetic smiles that didn’t really help the emotional overload. Jo swiped at her eyes again and swallowed back more tears.

“Let’s get out of here,” she said with strained brightness.

“Where?” Erika said, with a surprised laugh.

“Let’s go see your boys,” Jo suggested, needing to think about something besides herself for just a few moments. Loud rock and roll and other people seemed like just the thing.

“Really? You feel up to it?” Maggie asked with such concern that it made Jo pause. She glanced at Erika, seeing the same worry creasing her pale brow. Almost as if they sensed a problem.

Ridiculous.

“Of course,” Jo said, already rising from her seat. “Don’t you want to go see your boys?”

“If you want to, of course we do,” Erika said also standing.

Jo was counting on that.

 

Maksim Kostova knew all about Hell. After all, he’d been a resident of the place for all of his existence. The eighth circle to be exact. But the real Hell had nothing on this bar on the corner of Bourbon and Toulouse.

Sweat clung to his skin and the all-too-familiar strains of a Kansas song pounded around him, making his head ache. He mindlessly plucked a plastic cup from the tower of them and headed to the beer tap.

If this place, or rather the man currently playing keyboards on the stage across the room, wasn’t the only link he had left to his missing sister, Maksim wouldn’t be here.

But he was starting to lose hope. Every night, he waited, expecting that Vittorio, or someone affiliated with Vittorio, would give him another hint, or maybe even the answer to what happened to Ellina.

So far, that hadn’t been the case. Vittorio knew nothing. Maksim was confident about that. He’d known when he’d found the scrap of paper with Vittorio’s name written on it in Ellina’s handwriting that any connection was a long shot. But it was his only tie to anyone, and he kept hoping that someone Vittorio knew would know something, anything. A half human/half demon didn’t just disappear. Vittorio was Maksim’s last thread, however, tenuous. He didn’t have anywhere else to look.

He finished pouring a light beer for a man, who had been bellied up to the bar for hours. As Maksim slid the plastic cup toward the man, it was on the tip of his tongue to tell the barfly that light beer wasn’t going to make an iota of difference to his enormous girth. Not when he’d already had nine or ten of them. But instead of sharing that dieting tip, he said, “Put it on your tab?”

The man nodded, but for the first time since he arrived, his attention was on something other than his beer. Maksim followed the man’s stare toward the open doorway to his left.

Three women strolled in, all of whom he recognized immediately. The first two were Ren and Vittorio’s wives. But it was the third woman who caught Maksim’s attention.

Maksim had met Jo Burke a few times, although the woman always acted as if she only vaguely remembered him with each introduction. That rankled him. Women did not forget him. Just ask any of the moony-eyed chicks who came here night after night to watch him tend bar. He had as many groupies as the band did.

What needled him even more than her indifference was that he wasn’t even that into mortal women. So where did she get off ignoring him? It should be vice versa.

Mortal woman just didn’t know how to get their freak on. Not the way his demon appetites craved. Oh, he would use them for easy entertainment when there was wasn’t someone better to do. But paranormal paramours were always more interesting.

Still for whatever reason, aloof Jo Burke had managed to capture his notice and curiosity, probably
because
she didn’t seem interested in him. And Maksim did so love a challenge. Well, as long as he won in the end.

“Hi, Maksim,” Maggie greeted, taking a barstool across from him. Ren’s wife had to be the Pollyanna of the vampire world, but Maksim liked her despite it.

Erika wasn’t as warm. Of course she had good reason. He had been inside her head, a neat little demon trick he had. Not that she knew that, exactly. She just knew she wasn’t very comfortable around him. But then having someone inside your head didn’t exactly make you feel comfortable. Not that it mattered to him whether Erika liked him or not. She didn’t have any information about Ellina, which was the only reason he’d jumped into her mind.

Still Erika managed a tight smile and a mumbled hello.

But by then, all his interest was focused on the third woman of the group.

When had she gotten into town again?

“Hi there, ladies. What can I get you?” His gaze stayed on Jo as he spoke. He breathed in and something about her, something he couldn’t pinpoint, caused need to fire through his body like jet fuel ignited in his veins. The sensation literally took his breath away.

Unnerving, to say the least.

Jo’s dark eyes locked with his, her expression steady and remarkably unaffected by him. Again, he was struck by the fact that she didn’t seem to react to him in any way. No recognition, no happiness or dislike, nothing. Certainly no highly flammable substances shooting desire through her limbs.

“I’d love a club soda,” she said dropping onto a stool beside her friends. She then turned to watch the band, dismissing him.

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